University of South Carolina Libraries
PAGE 4—The Newberry Sun, Newberry, S. C., Thursday, Feb. 4, 1971 Life Scout Erwin Renwick Baker of Boy Scout Troop 1, sponsored by the Newberry Rotary Club working toward Eagle rank presented to Mr. Lawrence A. Richardson, Ad ministrator of the Newberry County Memorial Hospital, four cardiac resuscitation boards as his Eagle service project. Mr. Warren Cousins is Scoutmaster of Troop 1. Erwin is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Parr Baker. Garden members invited to lecture The Newberry Garden Club invites all garden club mem bers and flower arrangement enthusiasts of Newberry to a lecture and flower arrangement demonstration which will be held in the Community Hall Tuesday, Feb. 9th at 2 p.m. Mr. J. C. Dowling, Jr. of Gaff ney, S.C. will use as his sub ject “Let’s Take a Look at Ab stract.” He will demonstrate some Free form arrangements that will show ideas and moods in designs and how they are inspired through materials and containers. Mr. Dowling is president of the Cherokee Gladiolus Society, Gaffney, S.C. He is an active gardener, specializing in gla diolus and roses. The garden of Mr. and Mrs. Dowling is one of the beauty spots in Gaff ney and is on the visiting gar dens list for South Carolina. He is the only Male Master’s Flower Show J udge in the U S. He is now serving on the State Board of the Garden Club of South Carolina as Pro tocol and Personnel Chairman. He produced the first color ca lendar for the Garden Club of S.C. and was awarded the Ac hievement Certificate of Me rit. For the past several years he has lectured extensively throughout the nation on “The New Trend in Flower Arrang ing’’ and “Christmas Decor for the Home”. He has been fea tured flower arrangement speaker at State Garden Club conventions in Chicago, Boston. Iowa, Texas, Mississippi, Mia mi and Palm Beach, Florida. In 1962 he was winner of the Jackson and Perkins 5000 ster ling bowl competition and com pete in 1965 for the Best Ar ranger of the Decade. He is the only man to ever win this distinction. For the past two years he has been Director of Arts at the Piedmont Interstate Fair in Spartanburg, S.C. College receives literacy grant Newberry College will share in the $10,000 grant which the Lutheran Church in America awarded Friday, January 29, to the South Carolina Literacy Association (SCLA) to expand its literacy training program. The Lutheran college is the official tutor agency of the SCLA headed by Ben Bagwell of Greenville. Newberry’s role in the literacy campaign is to train tutors to teach adult illi terates how to read using the “each-one-teach-one” method. During the 1970-71 school year, the College under the di rection of Chaplain Harry We ber has conducted tutor train ing programs in 11 South Caro lina communities: Aiken, Allen dale, Beaufort, Camden, Char leston, Goose Creek, Hampton, Lancaster, Orangeburg, Union, and York. The student-faculty training teams have also sche duled a second training session in Orangeburg and one in Flo rence during February and March. “We stand ready to train vo lunteers in any South Carolina community,” Chaplain Weber said, when the $10,000 grant for the program was announced by Dr. Karl Kinard, president of the South Carolina Synod of the Lutheran Church in Ame rica. The campaign to help curb illiteracy among the 230,000 a- dults in South Carolina began in 1969 when the South Caro lina Junior Chamber of Com merce (Jaycees) and the SCLA began the tutor training ses sions. Students and faculty at Newberry College took an im mediate interest in the pro gram by volunteering to take the necessary training to qua lify as tutor-trainers. Bagwell said that in addition to the tutor-training program conducted by Newberry College, the SCLA hopes to conduct an nual door-to-door campaigns oromoting adult education in each county in South Carolina, to organize a strong literacy association headed up by vo lunteers in every county, and to obtain United Fund support in every county to support the activities of the SCLA. Lenoir Rhyne stops Indians The nine-game winning streak of the Newberry College Indians came to a grinding halt Mon day night when the Lenoir Rhyne Bears clawed the In dians 97-76 on the I«enoir Rhyne court in Hickory, N.C. The loss gave the Indians a 3-5 record in the Carolinas Con ference and a 13-10 season’s record. Mike Barb was the high scor er for the Indians with 21 points; Joe Styles hit for 17 points for the only other player to score in the double figures. Top man for the host squad was Hill with 22 points. S. C. vehicle registration up Vehicles in South Carolina during the 1970 licensing period inched closer to the one-and-one half million mark, according to the State Highway Department. Registrations for the license year which ended October 31 was 1,349,176, an increase of 64,000 from the 1,285,037 re ported for the 1969 licensing year. Newberrians get degrees Three graduates from New berry were among the students who received degrees during the University of South Caro lina’s winter graduation exer cises Saturday (Jan. 30). The graduates attending the ceremonies heard an address by S.C. Gov. John C. West in Carolina Coliseum. West also received an honorary degree. Receiving degrees were Ali cia Counts Blair, Bachelor of Arts in Education; James Ed ward Brice, Master of Busi ness Administration; and Cindy Rikard Stone, Bachelor of Arts in Education. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT The Reverend and Mrs. En- grum Lee Johnson, Jr. of Dar lington, S.C. proudly announce the birth of a son, William En- grum, bom January 21 at Mc Leod Infirmary, Florence, S.C. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William Edward Senn, Belfast Road, Newberry. Paternal grandparents are Mrs. Engrum Lee Johnson, Sr., Williamsburg Drive, Kingstree and the late Mr. Johnson. Ma ternal great-grandmothers are Mrs. J.E. Senn, Newberry and Mrs. J. R. Bedenbaugh, Sr. Prosperity. Mrs. Johnson is the former Ruth Senn of New berry. Nancy Harmon to play cast “Ah, Wilderness,” a corned} in three acts, by Eugene O’ Neal, completed a successful run at Columbia College last week. Miss Nancy Harmon, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Mere dith Harmon of Clarkson Ave., Newberry, played one of the parts in this production. She has worked with almost every play in the last three years at Columbia College, primarily as the lighting technician. She has performed with the Chil drens Theatre Group and this is her first major production as an actress. The production of “Ah, Wil derness” is hte end result of a special interim Drama Project worked out between the two colleges, Columbia and Wofford. During the entire month of Ja nuary, ten Wofford College men have lived at Columbia College, attending certain special class es with the Columbia College Drama students and rehears ing night and day for this per formance. After their five day run in the Columbia Arena Theatre last week the cast will carry the play to the Wofford campus this week, February 4-5-6. Enthusiastic support and hard work has made this first cooperative interim project a success. Nancy Harmon, a junior at Columbia College, and Vice President of her class, is study ing speech and drama. She is a member of the Alpha Psi Omega National Honorary Dra matic Fraternity. She plays with the College Bell Choir and has served for the past two years as president of that ta lented group of bell ringers, directed by Professor Richard Veale of the Music Depart ment of the College. Indian Princess Jan Cromer, a junior at New berry College, has been select ed the Indian Princess for Ja nuary by members of “The In dian,” the student newspaper at Newberry College. Miss Cro mer is an elementary educa tion major with a concentra tion in English; she is a mem ber of the campus chapter of the Young Republicans and is a former cheerleader. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Cromer, 1922 Harper Street, Newberry. If Interested! Maybe You Would Like To Know New Clothes Are Arriving Daily- We Think It’s A Nice Time To Select Your Spring Wardrobe. Carpenter’s I Women’s Apparel I Dry Goods, Millinery I Newberry, S. C.